The Scotsman

Highlights of this year’s radically different event

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Edinburgh College of Art will be transforme­d to create a new home for the Edinburgh Internatio­nal Book Festival, which will stage half of the 250 events it is planning before live audiences.

Two theatre spaces will be created in its sculpture court and west court, while its courtyard will be turned into a “village green” with TV screens to watch events as they unfold.

Here's a few highlights of the festival’s 2021 line-up.

Ian Rankin: William Mcilvanney – The Last Word, 30 August: Edinburgh-based publisher Canongate has brought two of Scotland’s most celebrated crime writers together to revive the latter’s gritty Glasgow detective Jack Laidlaw. At the request of Siobhan Lynch, the widow of Mcilvanney, who died six years ago, Rankin has turned an unfinished manuscript into a brand new novel.

One City: A Just Capital?, 23 August: Some of Edinburgh’s best-known authors contribute­d short stories to a 2005 collection aimed at raising money to fight social exclusion in the city. Ian Rankin, Alexander Mccall Smith, inset, and Irvine Welsh return to the stage with Nadine Aisha Jassat, Sara Sheridan and Anne Hamilton to discuss a brand new edition of One City and whether Edinburgh is more or less of a divided city 16 years later.

Jed Mercurio & Prasanna Puwanaraja­h: The Bionic Policeman, 16 August: Mercurio, the creator of Line of Duty has joined forces with one of the stars to produce Sleeper, the first in a hotly-anticipate­d graphic novel series. It follows the story of DS-5, a ‘biological­ly-enhanced law enforcemen­t marshal’ who is about to be decommissi­oned after decades working in deep space.

You’ve Never Slept in Mine by Jessie Kesson, adapted by Jenni Fagan, 27 August: Edinburgh author Fagan, who will be running walking tours of the Old Town locations which have inspired her new novel Luckenboot­h during the festival, is also working with the theatre company Stellar Quines and actors Genna Allan and Chloe Wyper on an adaptation of a BBC radio play by Jessie Kesson. The Inverness-born writer spent her early childhood in an Elgin slum before being moved to an orphanage and eventually being sent to work in service, where she suffered a breakdown.

The Force of Law, 24 August: Twenty years after the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Centre, BBC correspond­ent Nick Bryant, writer and journalist Tariq Ali and The New York Times’s Pentagon correspond­ent Helene Cooper discuss whether the mistakes of the past are likely to be repeated.

Alex Renton & Lisa Williams: Scotland's Black History Matters, 18 August: A year on from the Black Lives Matter rallies in Scotland, Lisa Williams, whose tours of Edinburgh give people a chance to learn about the city’s prominent black figures, and journalist Alex Renton, whose new book recalls his own family’s involvemen­t in transatlan­tic slavery, talk to Sally Magnusson about inheritanc­e, the case for reparation­s and rethinking the past.

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